Record Details

Temporal variations in plate convergence and eruption rates in the Western Cascades, Oregon

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Field Value
Title Temporal variations in plate convergence and eruption rates in the Western Cascades, Oregon
Names Verplanck, Emily P. (creator)
Duncan, Robert A. (creator)
Date Issued 1987-04 (iso8601)
Note copyrighted by American Geophysical Union
Abstract New K-Ar age determinations on
basalts, basaltic andesites, and ash flow
tuffs from the central Western Cascades in
Oregon range in age from 32 to 3 Ma. The
ages decrease from west to east and with
increasing elevation. Volcanism has been
continuous throughout the evolution of the
Western Cascades, with some periods of
greater activity: 13-16 Ma, 22-26 Ma and
29-31 Ma. Relative volume estimates
indicate that eruption rates decreased by a
factor of 6 from 35 Ma to the present. The
eruption rates during formation of the
Western Cascades Volcanic Arc were
influenced by changes in the direction and
rate of convergence between the Farallon
and North American plates. We have
developed a model of the Tertiary
convergence of these two plates, based on
the mantle-fixed hotspot reference frame,
which indicates a factor of 5 decrease in
convergence rate (16.0 to 3.2 cm/a).
Clockwise rotation of the western margin of
the North American plate led to a decrease
in the convergence angle since about 35 Ma.
Apparently, slower, more oblique subduction
resulted in a decrease in the volume of
erupted magmas.
Genre Article
Identifier Duncan, R. A., and Verplanck, E. P. (1987), Temporal variations in plate convergence and eruption rates in the Western Cascades, Oregon. Tectonics, 6 (2), 197-209.

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